Quantcast The Stentor CP 1024 Template #2
College Media Network

The Stentor

Current Issue:

Volk's last stand: a critique of Wetlands

By: Mary Volk, Columnist

Issue date: 4/16/09 Section: Opinion
  • Print
  • Email
Bowie and Stevens never let themselves get bogged down in the ridiculous sincerity and self-importance that destroy nuance and frivolity. I was actually quite frightened to come to college, because I worried that everyone would care about "big issues" and earnestly debate the state of the world without even noticing the states of their surroundings. My nightmare did not come to pass, but I always enter meetings with twenty-somethings with caution. Some of them are so busy trying to change the world that they quit living in it. I hate that.

Back to my favorite men. They are not haunted by vagueness or a damaging affection for clichés. Each artist grounds his brilliance in specificity and immediacy. In "Five Years," Bowie writes, "A soldier with a broken arm, fixed his stare to the wheels of a Cadillac/ A cop knelt and kissed the feet of a priest, and a queer threw up at the sight of that."

Look at that. In one group of words, he does a lot of things. It's the end of the world, we've got five years, that's all, and look at what he sees. He's not seeing world peace, harmony, or an end to starvation; Bowie is too smart to see millions of people at once. Bowie sees a soldier, a cop, and a queer. They fill up his mind. When you pay enough attention to detail, individuals can do that; trying to discuss groups or trends is proof of lost humanity.

Stevens glorifies the individual in tone and treatment. In "A Rabbit as King of the Ghosts," he writes, "And to feel that the light is a rabbit-light/ In which everything is meant for you/ And nothing need be explained." There's a cat waiting in the grass to eat that rabbit, but the world is still meant for him because he thinks it is. Instead of worrying about all the cats crouched and ready to eat all the rabbits in the world. Stevens lets the prey have his moment. He doesn't worry about what it means to be a rabbit, and he definitely doesn't worry about how mean those bloodthirsty cats are. It doesn't matter.

I would rather listen to Bowie sing the goblin king song from Labyrinth on endless loop than read statements made on behalf of groups. The groups can keep their goddamn ideologies.

I will continue to shave my legs and think nothing of the act, and I will listen to David Bowie while I do it. My first day on campus, a wise (if insensitive) tour guide said to me while I was crying into my cell phone, "get off the phone and make some friends."

That was truly excellent advice. Stop crying, don't try to comprehend the big picture, and witness your own surroundings.

When Bowie stops to witness, he writes that his brain hurts like a warehouse. It hurts like that because he takes things in instead of spewing things out all the time.

Happy graduation, everyone. I love you all. And ladies: if you find expected presentability to be oppressive, be sure to check out Wetlands. I certainly won't be engaging in that particular activity.
< prev Page 2 of 2

Article Tools

Be the first to comment on this story

  • NOTE: Email address will not be published

Type your comment below (html not allowed)

  I understand posting spam or other comments that are unrelated to this article will cause my comment to be flagged for deletion and possibly cause my IP address to be permanently banned from this server.


Copyright 2009 The Stentor. All Rights Reserved.

Poll

What's your favorite Thanksgiving dish?


Submit Vote

Give us your thoughts

This week The Stentor's print edition rolled out in a new form: tabloid style. We want to know what you think. Be sure to share your opinion on our weekly poll below. If you have additional comments and suggestions, let us know at the Layout Discussion Forum.

Advertisements